Cyberinfrastructure pioneer Francine Berman, the vice president for research, has been named a fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).

“On behalf of the Rensselaer community, I am delighted to share our heartfelt congratulations to Dr. Berman on her election as a fellow of the prestigious IEEE,” said President Shirley Ann Jackson. “Beyond her renown as an innovator and thought leader in the area of digital infrastructure, Dr. Berman is a highly effective university officer and a vibrant intellectual. We are privileged to have such a capable individual on the Institute leadership team.”

Widely recognized as a pioneer in the effort to build a stronger digital infrastructure in the United States, Berman has been named as a technology leader by Newsweek and BusinessWeek. In elevating her to a fellow, the IEEE cited her leadership in the areas of high-performance and grid computing.

Berman joined Rensselaer in 2009, following a 25-year career at the University of California, San Diego, where she was most recently an endowed professor of high-performance computing and the director of the San Diego Supercomputer Center. Berman has authored more than 165 articles, editorials, and research reports, spanning the topics of high-performance computing, grid computing, cyberinfrastructure, and digital data stewardship and preservation.

She recently served as co-chair of the international Blue Ribbon Task Force for Sustainable Digital Preservation and Access, whose reports on developing economically sustainable strategies to preserve valued digital information have been downloaded nearly 100,000 times. She is one of the two founding principal investigators of the National Science Foundation (NSF) TeraGrid project, and also served as director of the National Partnership for Advanced Computational Infrastructure, a consortium of more than 40 research groups and institutions with the goal of building a national infrastructure to support research and education in science and engineering.

Berman has served on many national and international committees, including the NSF Engineering Advisory Committee, the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of General Medical Sciences Advisory Committee, and the Fermilab board. She currently serves as vice chair of the board of trustees of the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology. Additionally, she is a fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery.